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Featured researches published by Chenggang Wu.


Molecular Microbiology | 2010

The Actinomyces oris type 2 fimbrial shaft FimA mediates co-aggregation with oral streptococci, adherence to red blood cells and biofilm development.

Arunima Mishra; Chenggang Wu; Jinghua Yang; John O. Cisar; Asis Das; Hung Ton-That

Interbacterial interactions between oral streptococci and actinomyces and their adherence to tooth surface and the associated host cells are key early events that promote development of the complex oral biofilm referred to as dental plaque. These interactions depend largely on a lectin‐like activity associated with the Actinomyces oris type 2 fimbria, a surface structure assembled by sortase (SrtC2)‐dependent polymerization of the shaft and tip fimbrillins, FimA and FimB respectively. To dissect the function of specific fimbrillins in various adherence processes, we have developed a convenient new technology for generating unmarked deletion mutants of A. oris. Here, we show that the fimB mutant, which produced type 2 fimbriae composed only of FimA, like the wild type co‐aggregated strongly with receptor‐bearing streptococci, agglutinated with sialidase‐treated red blood cells, and formed monospecies biofilm. In contrast, the fimA and srtC2 mutants lacked type 2 fimbriae and were non‐adherent in each of these assays. Plasmid‐based expression of the deleted gene in respective mutants restored adherence to wild‐type levels. These findings uncover the importance of the lectin‐like activity of the polymeric FimA shaft rather than the tip. The multivalent adhesive function of FimA makes it an ideal molecule for exploring novel intervention strategies to control plaque biofilm formation.


Molecular Microbiology | 2014

Lethality of sortase depletion in Actinomyces oris caused by excessive membrane accumulation of a surface glycoprotein

Chenggang Wu; I-Hsiu Huang; Chungyu Chang; Melissa E. Reardon-Robinson; Asis Das; Hung Ton-That

Sortase, a cysteine‐transpeptidase conserved in Gram‐positive bacteria, anchors on the cell wall many surface proteins that facilitate bacterial pathogenesis and fitness. Genetic disruption of the housekeeping sortase in several Gram‐positive pathogens reported thus far attenuates virulence, but not bacterial growth. Paradoxically, we discovered that depletion of the housekeeping sortase SrtA was lethal for Actinomyces oris; yet, all of its predicted cell wall‐anchored protein substrates (AcaA‐N) were individually dispensable for cell viability. Using Tn5‐transposon mutagenesis to identify factors that upend lethality of srtA deletion, we uncovered a set of genetic suppressors harbouring transposon insertions within genes of a locus encoding AcaC and a LytR‐CpsA‐Psr (LCP)‐like protein. AcaC was shown to be highly glycosylated and dependent on LCP for its glycosylation. Upon SrtA depletion, the glycosylated form of AcaC, hereby renamed GspA, was accumulated in the membrane. Overexpression of GspA in a mutant lacking gspA and srtA was lethal; conversely, cells overexpressing a GspA mutant missing a membrane‐localization domain were viable. The results reveal a unique glycosylation pathway in A. oris that is coupled to cell wall anchoring catalysed by sortase SrtA. Significantly, this novel phenomenon of glyco‐stress provides convenient cell‐based assays for developing a new class of inhibitors against Gram‐positive pathogens.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Pilus hijacking by a bacterial coaggregation factor critical for oral biofilm development

Melissa E. Reardon-Robinson; Chenggang Wu; Arunima Mishra; Chungyu Chang; Naomi Bier; Asis Das; Hung Ton-That

Significance The development of dental plaque biofilm requires specific and sequential molecular interactions between oral bacteria-colonizing host surfaces. Coaggregation between early colonizers is crucial to establish an environment suitable for late colonizers. Here, we describe that a surface protein in a Gram-positive bacterium that is not genetically linked to the fimbrial gene clusters hijacks a specific fimbrial polymerization apparatus to be displayed on the fimbrial tip. This tip-localized protein not only functions as the bona fide cell-to-cell adhesion factor for mediating coaggregation between the early colonizers Actinomyces oris and Streptococcus oralis but also serves as an initiator of fimbrial assembly. The formation of dental plaque, a highly complex biofilm that causes gingivitis and periodontitis, requires specific adherence among many oral microbes, including the coaggregation of Actinomyces oris with Streptococcus oralis that helps to seed biofilm development. Here, we report the discovery of a key coaggregation factor for this process. This protein, which we named coaggregation factor A (CafA), is one of 14 cell surface proteins with the LPXTG motif predicted in A. oris MG1, whose function was hitherto unknown. By systematic mutagenesis of each of these genes and phenotypic characterization, we found that the Actinomyces/Streptococcus coaggregation is only abolished by deletion of cafA. Subsequent biochemical and cytological experiments revealed that CafA constitutes the tip of a unique form of the type 2 fimbria long known for its role in coaggregation. The direct and predominant role of CafA in adherence is evident from the fact that CafA or an antibody against CafA inhibits coaggregation, whereas the shaft protein FimA or a polyclonal antibody against FimA has no effect. Remarkably, FimA polymerization was blocked by deletion of genes for both CafA and FimB, the previously described tip protein of the type 2 fimbria. Together, these results indicate that some surface proteins not linked to a pilus gene cluster in Gram-positive bacteria may hijack the pilus. These unique tip proteins displayed on a common pilus shaft may serve distinct physiological functions. Furthermore, the pilus shaft assembly in Gram-positive bacteria may require a tip, as is true for certain Gram-negative bacterial pili.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2011

Dual function of a tip fimbrillin of Actinomyces in fimbrial assembly and receptor binding

Chenggang Wu; Arunima Mishra; Jinghua Yang; John O. Cisar; Asis Das; Hung Ton-That

Interaction of Actinomyces oris with salivary proline-rich proteins (PRPs), which serve as fimbrial receptors, involves type 1 fimbriae. Encoded by the gene locus fimQ-fimP-srtC1, the type 1 fimbria is comprised of the fimbrial shaft FimP and the tip fimbrillin FimQ. Fimbrial polymerization requires the fimbria-specific sortase SrtC1, which catalyzes covalent linkage of fimbrial subunits. Using genetics, biochemical methods, and electron microscopy, we provide evidence that the tip fimbrillin, FimQ, is involved in fimbrial assembly and interaction with PRPs. Specifically, while deletion of fimP completely abolished the type 1 fimbrial structures, surface display of monomeric FimQ was not affected by this mutation. Surprisingly, deletion of fimQ significantly reduced surface assembly of the type 1 fimbriae. This defect was rescued by recombinant FimQ ectopically expressed from a plasmid. In agreement with the role of type 1 fimbriae in binding to PRPs, aggregation of A. oris with PRP-coated beads was abrogated in cells lacking srtC1 or fimP. This aggregation defect of the ΔfimP mutant was mainly due to significant reduction of FimQ on the bacterial surface, as the aggregation was not observed in a strain lacking fimQ. Increasing expression of FimQ in the ΔfimP mutant enhanced aggregation, while overexpression of FimP in the ΔfimQ mutant did not. Furthermore, recombinant FimQ, not FimP, bound surface-associated PRPs in a dose-dependent manner. Thus, not only does FimQ function as the major adhesin of the type 1 fimbriae, it also plays an important role in fimbrial assembly.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

A Disulfide Bond-forming Machine Is Linked to the Sortase-mediated Pilus Assembly Pathway in the Gram-positive Bacterium Actinomyces oris

Melissa E. Reardon-Robinson; Jerzy Osipiuk; Chungyu Chang; Chenggang Wu; Neda Jooya; Andrzej Joachimiak; Asis Das; Hung Ton-That

Background: Gram-positive bacteria secrete pilins through the Sec translocon in unfolded states. Results: Disruption of pilus disulfide bonds or genetic disruption of oxidoreductase-encoding genes mdbA and vkor abrogates pilus assembly in Actinomyces oris. Conclusion: MdbA and VKOR constitute a disulfide bond-forming machine in A. oris. Significance: Oxidative protein folding may be common in Actinobacteria and an attractive target for antimicrobials. Export of cell surface pilins in Gram-positive bacteria likely occurs by the translocation of unfolded precursor polypeptides; however, how the unfolded pilins gain their native conformation is presently unknown. Here, we present physiological studies to demonstrate that the FimA pilin of Actinomyces oris contains two disulfide bonds. Alanine substitution of cysteine residues forming the C-terminal disulfide bridge abrogates pilus assembly, in turn eliminating biofilm formation and polymicrobial interaction. Transposon mutagenesis of A. oris yielded a mutant defective in adherence to Streptococcus oralis, and revealed the essential role of a vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKOR) gene in pilus assembly. Targeted deletion of vkor results in the same defects, which are rescued by ectopic expression of VKOR, but not a mutant containing an alanine substitution in its conserved CXXC motif. Depletion of mdbA, which encodes a membrane-bound thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase, abrogates pilus assembly and alters cell morphology. Remarkably, overexpression of MdbA or a counterpart from Corynebacterium diphtheriae, rescues the Δvkor mutant. By alkylation assays, we demonstrate that VKOR is required for MdbA reoxidation. Furthermore, crystallographic studies reveal that A. oris MdbA harbors a thioredoxin-like fold with the conserved CXXC active site. Consistently, each MdbA enzyme catalyzes proper disulfide bond formation within FimA in vitro that requires the catalytic CXXC motif. Because the majority of signal peptide-containing proteins encoded by A. oris possess multiple Cys residues, we propose that MdbA and VKOR constitute a major folding machine for the secretome of this organism. This oxidative protein folding pathway may be a common feature in Actinobacteria.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Allelic exchange in Actinomyces oris with mCherry fluorescence counterselection

Chenggang Wu; Hung Ton-That

ABSTRACT Described here is a method for facile generation of markerless gene deletion mutants of Actinomyces oris. Homologous integration of a nonreplicative vector carrying a gene exchange cassette into the bacterial chromosome was selected for by using mCherry fluorescence and resistance to kanamycin. Completion of allelic replacement was counterselected for by using loss of fluorescence.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2010

Regulation of ciaXRH Operon Expression and Identification of the CiaR Regulon in Streptococcus mutans

Chenggang Wu; Eduardo A. Ayala; Jennifer S. Downey; Justin Merritt; Steven D. Goodman; Fengxia Qi

The ciaRH operon in Streptococcus mutans contains 3 contiguous genes, ciaXRH. Unlike the CiaRH system in other streptococci, only the ciaH-null mutant displays defective phenotypes, while the ciaR-null mutant behaves like the wild type. The objective of this study was to determine the mechanism of this unusual property. We demonstrate that the ciaH mutation caused a >20-fold increase in ciaR transcript synthesis. A ciaRH double deletion reversed the ciaH phenotype, suggesting that overexpressed ciaR might be responsible for the observed ciaH phenotypes. When ciaR was forced to be overexpressed by a transcriptional fusion to the ldh promoter in the wild-type background, the same ciaH phenotypes were restored, confirming the involvement of overexpressed ciaR in the ciaH phenotypes. The ciaH mutation and ciaR overexpression also caused transcriptional alterations in 100 genes, with 15 genes upregulated >5-fold. Bioinformatics analysis identified a putative CiaR regulon consisting of 8 genes/operons, including the ciaXRH operon itself, all of which were upregulated. In vitro footprinting on 4 of the 8 promoters revealed a protected region of 26 to 28 bp encompassing two direct repeats, NTTAAG-n5-WTTAAG, 10 bp upstream of the -10 region, indicating direct binding of the CiaR protein to these promoters. Taken together, we conclude that overexpressed CiaR, as a result of either ciaH deletion or forced expression from a constitutive promoter, is a mediator in the CiaH-regulated phenotypes.


eLife | 2017

Evolution of substrate specificity in a retained enzyme driven by gene loss

Ana Lilia Juárez-vazquez; Janaka N. Edirisinghe; Ernesto Alonso Verduzco-Castro; Karolina Michalska; Chenggang Wu; Lianet Noda-García; Gyorgy Babnigg; Michael Endres; Sofía Medina-Ruíz; Julián Santoyo-Flores; Mauricio Carrillo-Tripp; Hung Ton-That; Andrzej Joachimiak; Christopher S. Henry; Francisco Barona-Gómez

The connection between gene loss and the functional adaptation of retained proteins is still poorly understood. We apply phylogenomics and metabolic modeling to detect bacterial species that are evolving by gene loss, with the finding that Actinomycetaceae genomes from human cavities are undergoing sizable reductions, including loss of L-histidine and L-tryptophan biosynthesis. We observe that the dual-substrate phosphoribosyl isomerase A or priA gene, at which these pathways converge, appears to coevolve with the occurrence of trp and his genes. Characterization of a dozen PriA homologs shows that these enzymes adapt from bifunctionality in the largest genomes, to a monofunctional, yet not necessarily specialized, inefficient form in genomes undergoing reduction. These functional changes are accomplished via mutations, which result from relaxation of purifying selection, in residues structurally mapped after sequence and X-ray structural analyses. Our results show how gene loss can drive the evolution of substrate specificity from retained enzymes. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.22679.001


Mbio | 2017

Electron transport chain is biochemically linked to pilus assembly required for polymicrobial interactions and biofilm formation in the gram-positive actinobacterium Actinomyces oris

Belkys C. Sanchez; Chungyu Chang; Chenggang Wu; Bryan Tran; Hung Ton-That

ABSTRACT The Gram-positive actinobacteria Actinomyces spp. are key colonizers in the development of oral biofilms due to the inherent ability of Actinomyces to adhere to receptor polysaccharides on the surface of oral streptococci and host cells. This receptor-dependent bacterial interaction, or coaggregation, requires a unique sortase-catalyzed pilus consisting of the pilus shaft FimA and the coaggregation factor CafA forming the pilus tip. While the essential role of the sortase machine SrtC2 in pilus assembly, biofilm formation, and coaggregation has been established, little is known about trans-acting factors contributing to these processes. We report here a large-scale Tn5 transposon screen for mutants defective in Actinomyces oris coaggregation with Streptococcus oralis. We obtained 33 independent clones, 13 of which completely failed to aggregate with S. oralis, and the remainder of which exhibited a range of phenotypes from severely to weakly defective coaggregation. The former had Tn5 insertions in fimA, cafA, or srtC2, as expected; the latter were mapped to genes coding for uncharacterized proteins and various nuo genes encoding the NADH dehydrogenase subunits. Electron microscopy and biochemical analyses of mutants with nonpolar deletions of nuo genes and ubiE, a menaquinone C-methyltransferase-encoding gene downstream of the nuo locus, confirmed the pilus and coaggregation defects. Both nuoA and ubiE mutants were defective in oxidation of MdbA, the major oxidoreductase required for oxidative folding of pilus proteins. Furthermore, supplementation of the ubiE mutant with exogenous menaquinone-4 rescued the cell growth and pilus defects. Altogether, we propose that the A. oris electron transport chain is biochemically linked to pilus assembly via oxidative protein folding. IMPORTANCE The Gram-positive actinobacterium A. oris expresses adhesive pili, or fimbriae, that are essential to biofilm formation and Actinomyces interactions with other bacteria, termed coaggregation. While the critical role of the conserved sortase machine in pilus assembly and the disulfide bond-forming catalyst MdbA in oxidative folding of pilins has been established, little is known about other trans-acting factors involved in these processes. Using a Tn5 transposon screen for mutants defective in coaggregation with Streptococcus oralis, we found that genetic disruption of the NADH dehydrogenase and menaquinone biosynthesis detrimentally alters pilus assembly. Further biochemical characterizations determined that menaquinone is important for reactivation of MdbA. This study supports the notion that the electron transport chain is biochemically linked to pilus assembly in A. oris via oxidative folding of pilin precursors. IMPORTANCE The Gram-positive actinobacterium A. oris expresses adhesive pili, or fimbriae, that are essential to biofilm formation and Actinomyces interactions with other bacteria, termed coaggregation. While the critical role of the conserved sortase machine in pilus assembly and the disulfide bond-forming catalyst MdbA in oxidative folding of pilins has been established, little is known about other trans-acting factors involved in these processes. Using a Tn5 transposon screen for mutants defective in coaggregation with Streptococcus oralis, we found that genetic disruption of the NADH dehydrogenase and menaquinone biosynthesis detrimentally alters pilus assembly. Further biochemical characterizations determined that menaquinone is important for reactivation of MdbA. This study supports the notion that the electron transport chain is biochemically linked to pilus assembly in A. oris via oxidative folding of pilin precursors.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2016

Genetics and Cell Morphology Analyses of the Actinomyces oris srtA Mutant

Chenggang Wu; Melissa E. Reardon-Robinson; Hung Ton-That

Sortase is a cysteine-transpeptidase that anchors LPXTG-containing proteins on the Gram-positive bacterial cell wall. Previously, sortase was considered to be an important factor for bacterial pathogenesis and fitness, but not cell growth. However, the Actinomyces oris sortase is essential for cell viability, due to its coupling to a glycosylation pathway. In this chapter, we describe the methods to generate conditional srtA deletion mutants and identify srtA suppressors by Tn5 transposon mutagenesis. We also provide procedures for analyzing cell morphology of this mutant by thin-section electron microscopy. These techniques can be applied for analyses of other essential genes in A. oris.

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Hung Ton-That

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Asis Das

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Arunima Mishra

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Chungyu Chang

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Melissa E. Reardon-Robinson

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Andrzej Joachimiak

Argonne National Laboratory

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Jinghua Yang

National Institutes of Health

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John O. Cisar

National Institutes of Health

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I-Hsiu Huang

National Cheng Kung University

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